My experience is, that on my Pro-1 the cleaning cycles happen regularly after some time, whether printing every day or not. Been printing couple 4x6 every day and eventually on the third day the cleaning cycle just happened. Canon never disclosed all the magic that goes into the cycling these beasts...
Can you PROGRAM the canon pro 1000 printer to print a nozzle check daily or do you have to be present and manually initiate a daily nozzle check in order to avoid the ink wasting cleaning cycle? Thank you, Lynne
Just to be clear. Is the process to print a nozzle check every day and print a matte test print and photo test print or should I just do a nozzle check every day?
I've been following your advice for about 6 months now, but I have to say that I think "once per day" is too much, at least with the latest firmware and with a new printer. I've noticed the same amount of "long cleaning cycles" printinf every day or printing once a week/5 days... I was printing every day and my inkeset in one day went from 30% to 10, all inks (half were already at 10)... Then they stayed there.
@@MIshaHaijtemawell, the most important thing is to use it as much as you can, like he says... I only have experience with mine, so it is not statistically relevant, but personally I have the latest firmware and I keep it on all the time: even with daily purge sheet printing, I get long cleaning cycles once in a while.
@ridni2388 I was thinking of buying this printer but I heard that for non-intensive use (hobby), the canon Pro-1000 would waste up to 50% of the ink with expensive periodical cleaning cycles.
From your experience would printing once a week significantly avoid ink waste? Can you estimate in total how much % of the cartridge is ending up in the waste box? Thanks in advance for your reply
Unfortunately the issue around ink waste is common & being a problem for years!, what you have to understand is that Canon, Epson, HP are all the same they design & program their printers to clean the nozzles on a regular basis & basically Waste lots of ink which in turn forces you to Buy More ink = More profit for the above printer manufacturers 😊
Hello Jose! Thanks for all your videos! I accidentally started to fill my light grey container with regular grey. Should I do a Windex flush/ wait till dry and start again ? Would love your advice thanks!
Love your videos, seen several on the topic of PRO 1000 now and just have one question. I am just an amatur photographer so i will NOT print every day. But i still want really high quality prints. Is the PRO 300 "wasting" as much ink as the 1000? Or what should a amatur photographer buy not to be ruined by ink cost?
Just my 2 pence worth... but I'm pretty confident that the Pro-300 is a lot less wasteful compared to the Pro-1000. The 1000 is just a beast and if you're not really printing too often a 300 would be much more cost effective. Just our experience but the 1000 is likely just too much.
I don't understand why QImage can not trigger all 12 cartridges, no matter the paper. I purchased the software expecting that it will do all inks but it only does the one you can select in the software and then I apparently I need to waste matt and glossy paper to trigger different inks? Is there no option or file that can trigger all 12 inks for a single page print no matter the paper selected? Thanks Jose Oh also, I am running low on 5 inks and I have them here already but its still printing, I am afraid that it uses now the rest of ink that is in the lines but the cartridge is empty. What happens if thats the case? Then it will take forever to refill the lines, won't it? Or will it stop printing when the cartridge itself is really empty. I use original inks. I don't have a weight scale to measure 33grams
Hi! I'm looking for some advice. I got my PRO1000 this tuesday and have approximately printed 5 x A3 and 10 x A2 since then, all on Canons luster paper. More precisely it is 5 x 30x30 cm and 10 x 42x42 cm, basically squares the size of the shortend of the papers. The rest of the paper area were left unprinted. When I check my ink levels it is already down to a third on each of the cartridges. When I saw this I freaked out a bit. Have I been doing something wrong, do the starter cartridges not come full or what is going on?
Half of starter cartridge is used to fill internal tanks and tubes inside printer. They even mention this in manual - that first set will produce less prints
Would this apply to Canon Pro 200 & 300 also? I’m about to buy a Canon Pro 200 today and was concerned about ink usage or longer periods of time without printing. I was talking to my wife last night to explain that I think we should be printing at least one 4x6 photo a week and hopefully that’ll keep the printer working ok. Do you have any thoughts or criticisms about my plan? If we print enough I’d like to refill ink but if that’s the case then maybe we will one day upgrade to the Pro 1000…for now this is personal use. I have a spinal injury so it makes life in general difficult so this is one part of wanting a home photo printer instead of outsourcing and I don’t like the shipping aspect since I’m impatient 😂. The other part is we have a toddler who likes taking photos with us and going through the whole process would be fun and educational…even though he’s only 3.5 years old. I’ve had really bad experiences in the past with inkjet printers and even with almost full ink cartridges they say they are empty or low…this was like a decade ago or longer and since then I’ve used a home B&W laser printer or outsourced my colour and photo prints.
I have the Pro-200, I just leave it off when not using it. Dye inks (PRO-200) tend to not clog up as much as pigment ink (pigment based ink is on the PRO-1000 and PRO-1100). I haven't found the cleaning cycles to be that aggressive on the Pro-200, I will listen to it more and see if anything is happening while printing. IMO, unless you really need the extra width, the Pro-200 is the best printer for most people.
My experience is, that on my Pro-1 the cleaning cycles happen regularly after some time, whether printing every day or not. Been printing couple 4x6 every day and eventually on the third day the cleaning cycle just happened. Canon never disclosed all the magic that goes into the cycling these beasts...
Every day?? Damn...you can't go out of town or take a vacation owning this printer?? lol
Lol exactly wha tim thinking
You can program it
@@wesleyk.8376really? How I can do it
Can you PROGRAM the canon pro 1000 printer to print a nozzle check daily or do you have to be present and manually initiate a daily nozzle check in order to avoid the ink wasting cleaning cycle? Thank you, Lynne
Thanks, Jose.
What is the average temperature in your room? Where do you live? By the sea or in the mountains? Humidity?
Thank you
Just to be clear. Is the process to print a nozzle check every day and print a matte test print and photo test print or should I just do a nozzle check every day?
The nozzle check will use both blacks. But the Nozzle check does not really
excercize the printer enough. It's only for diagnosing printing issues!
when you say "print everyday", could it be a simple low quality of a small dimension photo? thanks
I've been following your advice for about 6 months now, but I have to say that I think "once per day" is too much, at least with the latest firmware and with a new printer. I've noticed the same amount of "long cleaning cycles" printinf every day or printing once a week/5 days... I was printing every day and my inkeset in one day went from 30% to 10, all inks (half were already at 10)... Then they stayed there.
What would you reconmend doing then?
@@MIshaHaijtemawell, the most important thing is to use it as much as you can, like he says... I only have experience with mine, so it is not statistically relevant, but personally I have the latest firmware and I keep it on all the time: even with daily purge sheet printing, I get long cleaning cycles once in a while.
Ah Perfect. So to reply on your original answer you would rather do a print (lets say a5 paper) every week/5days then every day?
@@ridni2388
@ridni2388 I was thinking of buying this printer but I heard that for non-intensive use (hobby), the canon Pro-1000 would waste up to 50% of the ink with expensive periodical cleaning cycles.
From your experience would printing once a week significantly avoid ink waste?
Can you estimate in total how much % of the cartridge is ending up in the waste box?
Thanks in advance for your reply
Unfortunately the issue around ink waste is common & being a problem for years!, what you have to understand is that Canon, Epson, HP are all the same they design & program their printers to clean the nozzles on a regular basis & basically Waste lots of ink which in turn forces you to Buy More ink = More profit for the above printer manufacturers 😊
I have to keep this printer permanently on?
Yes
Does permanently on means that I have to turn the power saving mode to „off“ on the printer?
confusing.Are y saying that I only have to print every day that colour thing and thats it?
Hello Jose!
Thanks for all your videos!
I accidentally started to fill my light grey container with regular grey. Should I do a Windex flush/ wait till dry and start again ? Would love your advice thanks!
You mean on the PRO1000? Or what?
@@cheo1949 The Pixma Pro 100. I bought cartridges and ink from precision colors (C - CLI42GY).
so to sum everything up we need to print a nozzle check and a glossy print each day. Is that correct?
Plain paper is good enough! Unless you want to see every miniscule detail of the nozzle check
Love your videos, seen several on the topic of PRO 1000 now and just have one question. I am just an amatur photographer so i will NOT print every day. But i still want really high quality prints. Is the PRO 300 "wasting" as much ink as the 1000? Or what should a amatur photographer buy not to be ruined by ink cost?
Just my 2 pence worth... but I'm pretty confident that the Pro-300 is a lot less wasteful compared to the Pro-1000. The 1000 is just a beast and if you're not really printing too often a 300 would be much more cost effective. Just our experience but the 1000 is likely just too much.
Hi Jose,
I couldn’t understand what you meant with key image on clock tool special types of perch images ?
Unclog Tool in Qimage Ultimate. PURGE IMAGES.
I don't understand why QImage can not trigger all 12 cartridges, no matter the paper. I purchased the software expecting that it will do all inks but it only does the one you can select in the software and then I apparently I need to waste matt and glossy paper to trigger different inks? Is there no option or file that can trigger all 12 inks for a single page print no matter the paper selected? Thanks Jose Oh also, I am running low on 5 inks and I have them here already but its still printing, I am afraid that it uses now the rest of ink that is in the lines but the cartridge is empty. What happens if thats the case? Then it will take forever to refill the lines, won't it? Or will it stop printing when the cartridge itself is really empty. I use original inks. I don't have a weight scale to measure 33grams
Hi. Is it possible to create a Nozzle Check Scheduled job in Qimage Ultimate?
No. Not a Nozzle Check. Only the Unclog Image!
Hi! I'm looking for some advice. I got my PRO1000 this tuesday and have approximately printed 5 x A3 and 10 x A2 since then, all on Canons luster paper. More precisely it is 5 x 30x30 cm and 10 x 42x42 cm, basically squares the size of the shortend of the papers. The rest of the paper area were left unprinted. When I check my ink levels it is already down to a third on each of the cartridges. When I saw this I freaked out a bit. Have I been doing something wrong, do the starter cartridges not come full or what is going on?
Check your IMPUT and OUTPUT Size. It needs to be the same.
I think I heard in a different review that the ink level doesn't include what is in the lines... but I'm not sure so don't quote me 😅
Half of starter cartridge is used to fill internal tanks and tubes inside printer. They even mention this in manual - that first set will produce less prints
Would this apply to Canon Pro 200 & 300 also?
I’m about to buy a Canon Pro 200 today and was concerned about ink usage or longer periods of time without printing. I was talking to my wife last night to explain that I think we should be printing at least one 4x6 photo a week and hopefully that’ll keep the printer working ok. Do you have any thoughts or criticisms about my plan?
If we print enough I’d like to refill ink but if that’s the case then maybe we will one day upgrade to the Pro 1000…for now this is personal use.
I have a spinal injury so it makes life in general difficult so this is one part of wanting a home photo printer instead of outsourcing and I don’t like the shipping aspect since I’m impatient 😂. The other part is we have a toddler who likes taking photos with us and going through the whole process would be fun and educational…even though he’s only 3.5 years old.
I’ve had really bad experiences in the past with inkjet printers and even with almost full ink cartridges they say they are empty or low…this was like a decade ago or longer and since then I’ve used a home B&W laser printer or outsourced my colour and photo prints.
I have the Pro-200, I just leave it off when not using it. Dye inks (PRO-200) tend to not clog up as much as pigment ink (pigment based ink is on the PRO-1000 and PRO-1100). I haven't found the cleaning cycles to be that aggressive on the Pro-200, I will listen to it more and see if anything is happening while printing. IMO, unless you really need the extra width, the Pro-200 is the best printer for most people.
@@nafnaf0 yes that’s what we went with, the Pro 200 but I need to print more 😂 still getting use to colours when printing.
slave to the grind